A blog to communicate, discuss, and advocate for the civil rights and important role Small Flock Poultry Farmers can play (and should play) in Canadian Society.
Small Flockers are on the side of justice & truth, and against privilege & power. Unfortunately, the more we compromise with privilege and power, the more we reduce the capacity for truth and justice.

“Halal is really important to uphold a Muslim’s spirituality, the
acceptance of our worship in the eyes of God is dependent on it, that
we’re only consuming Halal,” says Omar Subedar, a Toronto-area imam who
serves as the secretary general and official spokesperson of the Halal Monitoring Authority ("HMA").
. . .

Subedar says that revelations from [a prior] investigation led to the
formation of the HMA, which maintains a comprehensive listing of
Halal-certified producers, brands and restaurants.
The next step
for Subedar and his fellow imams is to create an official, national
governing body to regulate the certification of Halal products.

There is a growing Muslim population in Canada, especially around
Toronto and the GTA. Lack of supply and demanding customers entices the
unscrupulous to buy or create fake Halal meats.

Some feel that Halal is solely concerned about the killing process. Others believe that the entire life cycle of the animal is important, culminated with the proper prayer and process at the abattoir. If you are looking for "best in class" animal welfare, you may be interested in small flock pasture raised chicken. Check out the Mission, Vision, and Principles of SFPFC. We believe these Principles of SFPFC are clear, open, comprehensive, and effective; unlike the secret, voluntary compliance or non-compliance, ambiguous, superficial, unverified, conflicting, or non-existent principles of the commercial chicken producers in Ontario (see CFO), and Canada-wide (see CFC).

"In March 2004 the Jami’yyatul Ulama Canada (CCMT) received complaints
from the muslim community and from certain individuals from the halal
industry that many things within the industry are not in compliance with
halal guidelines. Subsequently, the Halal Foods Department carried out
inspections in 4 meat slaughter plants, 13 poultry slaughter plants, 7
further processing plants and several meat & poultry retailers, all
of which are the major suppliers of halal consumables within the GTA."

The HMA's certification trademark that will be on the label
of all foods certified by HMA

Any meat products must come from animals which have undergone a prescribed method of slaughtering (known as dhabihah) in order to be considered halal.

In brief, the Halal method of slaughtering animals consists of using a well sharpened knife to make a swift, deep incision that cuts the front of the throat, the carotid artery, wind pipe and jugular veins but leaves the spinal cord intact. The blood is to be completely drained from the body before its meat is cut. The head of an animal that is slaughtered using halal methods is aligned with the qiblah (ie. facing Mecca). In addition to the direction, permitted animals should be slaughtered in the name of Allah (the Lord) and the person who is slaughtering should be a Muslim and he/she should be in a good mental condition and faith. All these steps have to be completed to render the meat edible for Muslims' consumption.

Halal has similar standards and requirements to kosher. Kosher specifies how the animal must be slaughtered, but Halal adds spiritual requirements as well. Inspection and certification of kosher is a more mature system than the newer Halal certification system.

Trademarks that may be displayed on kosher products sold
in Canada, showing the food producer has passed the
necessary auditing and certification for designation as kosher.

Late last year, the owners of a halal beef supplier in Iowa were
charged with selling $4.9 million in beef that prosecutors said did not
follow the halal practices it promised.

Some other fraudulent Halal cases have occurred:

In November 2011, a supermarket chain in Anaheim, California, paid
fines of $527,000 after it sold regular meat as halal.

A wholesaler in
England was fined nearly $100,000 last year after investigators caught
the company putting the halal label on chicken that was traced to a
supplier that did not sell halal meat.

A manager pleaded guilty to
directing workers at the Midamar Corp. to repackage beef products from a
slaughterhouse that wasn’t approved for export to Malaysia and
Indonesia. The company has denied wrongdoing and moved to dismiss the case,
arguing the charges violate the US First Amendment for "free speech". Islamic Services of
America, which certified halal beef for Midamar, said the U.S.
government can’t enforce religious slaughter protocols.

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